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Bigger is better: Why millennials are over the tiny home trend

Millennials are looking to purchase larger homes according to housing trends and consumer research.
/ Source: Zillow

Downsizing? That’s so 2016. Housing trends and consumer research indicate a move toward upsizing as homeowners transition to larger dwellings.

For Rhiannon Kruse, moving to a bigger home was about facing the music.

For five years, Kruse and her husband had squeezed themselves into a downtown Seattle high-rise. At 700 square feet, living in their home meant giving up a dresser to cram clothing into an under-the-bed storage space, and limiting the number of guests they could invite over for dinner. Even Kruse’s parents had to stay in a hotel after making the six-hour drive from Oregon to visit; there just wasn’t enough space for overnight guests.

But for the duo, both professional entertainers, the final straw was the makeshift recording studio they crammed into a tiny desk space, wedged between the bed and the window. It just wasn’t practical for a couple that make their living as piano players, Kruse said.

“We had a keyboard setup and a desk and recording equipment. To play, we had to wear headphones because we were in a shared space,” Kruse said. “We definitely maximized the space, but everything had to have a purpose.”

So when Kruse’s husband broached the idea of moving into a much larger house just outside the city limits, it took a little bit of convincing — but not that much. The couple fell in love with a 2,700-square-foot, newly constructed home about 15 miles north of the heart of the city.

They also fell in love with the idea of having a place to put a piano — an actual piano.

“My grandmother had given us her grand piano. It was sitting in a storage place for two years,” Kruse said. “(Now) I play a lot more at home. Probably five times as much — and when I do, it’s relaxing. I don’t feel suffocated.”

Upsizing home trend
Rhiannon Kruse and Jeff Coleron in front of their home on the day they moved in. Rhiannon Kruse

“People want these larger houses”

That couple’s story may not be much of an anomaly these days. They’re part of an uptick in sizing: More homeowners are opting for a bigger home and larger price tag, skipping the traditional starter home altogether. Millennials are especially part of this movement, according to Zillow research.

What’s more? A new analysis of census data shows that the median square footage of new homes is up 20 percent since the year 2000, from about 2,000 square feet to about 2,500 square feet.

New research shows that homeowners are buying and building bigger homes, even if the size of their lot isn't increasing.
New research shows that homeowners are buying and building bigger homes, even if the size of their lot isn't increasing. Zillow

The data corresponds with what sociologists are seeing firsthand, said Brian Miller, an associate professor of sociology at Wheaton College, just outside of Chicago. Miller, who studies cities, suburban migration and culture, argues that several factors could be impacting the shift in housing trends, including the strength of the national economy.

“I see a lot about tiny houses and micro-apartments in Seattle, San Francisco and New York — these cities who are really grappling with housing issues and trying to fast-track 200- or 400-square-foot apartments,” Miller said. “And yet, the overall pattern across America is that people want these larger houses.

“The economy has gotten better over the last few years,” he continues, mentioning cities like Dallas, one of the hottest housing markets in the country. “It seems it’s enabled people to (buy large houses) again.”

Popular culture may be influencing this decision as well, Miller added, pointing out how homes are depicted on television, in both reality and scripted genres.

“The typical home on TV is huge. Think about the ‘Friends’ apartments, which were impossibly large,” he said. “I’m thinking of HGTV shows I’ve seen over the past few years, where the dining room seats 10 or 12. I don’t have those parties, but if you’re watching HGTV, it just seems like everything is huge.”

Couple at home watching TV.
Popular reality and scripted TV shows often depict larger homes as the norm.Getty Images/iStockphoto

Growing home size, guided by research

The abundance of larger homes in popular entertainment isn’t an accident. Home design shows are rooting their programming in extensive research, said Julie Link, director of research and consumer insights for Scripps Networks, which owns HGTV, the Food Network and others. The company recently conducted an in-depth, comprehensive study they called "Dynamics Shaping the Future of Home."

The study’s goal was to better understand what is going on in the lives and homes of the Scripps Networks’ audience in order to cater programming to them. The network asked consumers to complete video journals, diary entries, collages and even Pinterest boards.

“We don’t want to be showing million-dollar homes when we’re in a recession,” Link added. “We want to be reflective of what’s going on in the homes of our viewers.”

The results? Both surprising — and not. Younger consumers (adults between 25 and 39 years old) are beginning to prioritize space, the study found. Fifty-six percent of millennials said that having a large home is important to them, compared with 42 percent of Gen Xers and just 35 percent of baby boomers.

Moving house.
Younger consumers, like Millennials, prioritize space, according to the study.Getty Images/iStockphoto

Once young homeowners find the perfect space, many are biding their time until they find items that are multifunctional and carry meaning, Link continued. They might wait to fill an empty wall until, say, they can frame Instagram photos from a favorite trip, or afford to purchase a high-tech yoga mat that can also double as an elegant carpet.

“Millennials want a story behind (what they buy). They’re doing this to create a sanctuary,” Link explained. “The world is a chaotic place right now, no matter what your views on politics are. (Millennials) really look inward, and they want to control something. The easiest thing for them to control is their home.”

Open floor plans reflect modern lifestyles

Add that focus on intentional buying to the shift in how homes are designed, and you'll get larger, open spaces. Gone are the days of rigid, closed-off eating spaces or television rooms. In their place are open floor plans and shared spaces, said Mary Dignan Hill, a real estate agent with John Aaroe Group in Southern California.

“Definitely I would say a home design trend is happening. People don’t have formal dining rooms, or aren’t interested in formal dining rooms anymore,” said Dignan Hill. “A more casual lifestyle is becoming more common, and I can see that reflected in home design.”

Dignan Hill, who has worked in real estate for a decade, recently noticed more clients seeking out open floor concepts or renovating older homes to take down walls to create larger, open spaces.

“People want to be able to be in their kitchen and cook, but also be with their family,” she notes. “Where you used to have a separate kitchen, a separate dining room and a separate television room, it’s all becoming one big space.”

Living Room.
An open floor plan tears down walls to create one bigger space.Getty Images/iStockphoto

Room to stretch

Two years after upsizing from 700 square feet into her four-bedroom, three-bathroom home, space is still a novel idea to Kruse — and one she doesn’t take for granted.

“Now that I have the extra space, I understand it. I understand why people want to do it,” she said. “I really don’t miss living in the condo, and I thought I would.”

She mentions the give-and-take of their old, cramped quarters: How, when she lived in the small condo, if she bought a shirt, she’d have to get rid of an old one. A new pair of shoes meant donating a worn-out pair to charity. It was a dance of space.

Most importantly, her new 2,700-square-foot home — with backyard raspberry bushes, fire pit and private recording space — just brings her peace, she said.

“I had felt so tense living downtown,” Kruse recalled. “When we finally got to space and we could stretch and everything — a lot of that tension was alleviated.”

Find out how much upsizing would cost you in major U.S. metro areas.

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